.. aâ€. y ...__.._.â€;=,, r- _ _ , . . . .4._-â€"._..â€".4~â€"~¢â€"â€"‘â€"-“ ». .. WWWâ€"A... "gum" ,_.._.' *'~â€"»...~;.;2‘....A__w~..- “mu-..._.v_......;:.~_....,..- v" --.W~A«.~me.‘.~.. 0.». _ ....<. -L a... ......i:__....â€"~.L..1- .4 Avgâ€"m “<3WW- vw‘m "m", a . . ,. , .. “w «a "a... no. ra‘h-W'MW" . mzwl- M‘M‘m’w‘m†“‘3 ’9‘â€. W ‘ ' ' . . . < . . “kavm‘ Mrgg-AMW~M_5W‘ a} Y. z < ‘44". - c - ~ ‘ ‘2‘?“ . v , ,s‘ z . g H . ~. a...’ runnvur. - .-â€"J .4-0 m ' Mfu- My *- -’ i siiisir wires N Is one of‘ the necessities of present times, when accuracy and promptness are required in all departments of business :‘l’ife. Buy a \Valthai‘n Watch and have a good, dependable timeâ€" keeper. \Ve carry the best quality 'of‘ goods that can be purchased from the best manufacturers. as siiiss Issuer of Marriage Licenses. The Old Reliable Jewelry Store. . Fenelon Falls. L’rotessionul Cards LEGAL MCLAUGLHIN, PEEL, FULTON & STINSON. )ARRIS'I‘ERS, SOLICITORS, NOTAR- l ies. Money to loan. Special atten- tion given to investments. Branch ofï¬ce at h‘enelon Falls, open every Tuesday. ~Lindsay office over Dominion Bank. R. J. MCLAUGHLINJL 0. A. M. FULTON,B. A. ' Jas. A. PEEL. T. H. STINSON. iiorkins, WEEKS & HOPKINS. ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, AND Notaries. Solicitors for the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan at terms to suit the borrower. Offices No. 6 William St. south, Lindsay, Ont. and at Wood- ville, Ontario. H. HOPKINS, K. 0., C. E. WEEKS, F. HOLMES HOPKINS, B. A nooun &"JXGi<‘sT)N v "‘ ARRIS’I‘ERS, SOLIUITORS, &c. Of fice,William street,Lindsay. F. D. Moons. A. JACKSON STEWART & O'CONNOR, ' ' ARRISTERS, NOTARIES, &o. MONEY I to loan at lowest current rates. Terms to suit borrowers. Office on corner of Kent and York streets, Lindsay. 'l‘. STEWART. L. V. O’CONNOR, B. A. LEIGH R. KNIGHT. ARRISTER,» SOLICI'I‘OR, NOTARY 'Public. Successor to McDiarmid 8: Weeks. Visits made to Fenelon Falls by appointment. Money to loan anp Real Estate bought and sold. Ofï¬ce Kent St., Lindsay, Telephone 41. DENTAL. _,__ Dr. S. J. SIMS, DENTIST, Fene] on Falls. Graduate of Toronto University and Royal College of Dental Surgeons. ALL BRANCHES or DENTISTRY performed according to the latestimproved methods at moderate prices. OFFICE:â€"Over Burgoyne’s store, Col- orne street MEDICAL. , DR. H. H. GRAHAM. â€"u. 0.,0. 34., n n. e s. Eng.,n.c.r. a 5., 02m, 1!. r. u. s.â€" HYSICIAN, SURGEON d: ACOOUCH- our. Office. Francis Street, Fenclon Falls. DR. H. B. JOHNSTONE, ASSOCIATE CORONER COUNTY OF VICTORIA. SUCCESSOR T0 DR. A. “TILSON, RADUATE OF TORONTO UNIVER- I sity. Physician, Surgeon and Ac- coucheur. Ofï¬ce, Colborne street, Fenâ€" elon Falls. M m AUCTIONEER. THOMAS CASHORE, anemones - FENELON mus. Sales of all kinds conducted in a ï¬rst glhss manner. Secure dates before‘sic’le vp‘ï¬iging. ..-,.. 3m .1 fl a that if your feet are right you are all gright. A good deal oftruth in it too. A: There are rubbers here for any shape of shoe almost. They are this year’s goods strong and durable. 7 Put a pair on and your feet will never guess that the ground is wet and slushy. ' i i E E i A maxim says 5 i i .E i A Stitch in Time Saves nine, and a suit in time keeps you always 3 well dressed. It pays to bee. little forehanded in ordering a new outï¬t of clothes, for various reasons. Call in and let us take your measure for a new suit. § Up-toâ€"date goods, style and workmanship. Our motto is " Fashionable Tailoring at Popular Prices.†rownrev sees. Fine Tailoring Fenelan Falls omen FRUITS E Are now so skilfully prepared that they make- an excellent substitute for theifresh article, par- We carry a complete line. ticularly at this season. E Our stock of groceries is also as ‘usual of the very best quality. ROBSON & SON. W FALLS, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JAN. 24, 1913. [MW HEAD OFFICE ESTABLISHED 1817 Paid up Capital $1 6,000,000.00. : ’9‘“; ;"1e-'~;v'n‘-‘y :_»:‘.~§’~v".~Â¥~m~~~-1-.-.--f~>:**- . .i .' i “Mr-errfs‘eu'mo new; I BANK 0F MDNTREM, †l‘lONTTï¬ F} .AL. INCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT Reserve Fund 331 6,000,000.00. ASSETS OVER $240,000,000. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTEIENT Deposits taken of $1 and upwards, which can be t. ' ‘ withdrawn on demand. R. M. Hamilton, Mgr. M Apostles of Murder. The press despatches report that General Tasker H. Bliss of the United States army, addressing the National Guard association of the United States at Norfold, Va., a few days ago, said that it was all wrong to oppoSe war and to favor peace. The general de- clared that “certain college presidents, professors and others moulding the manhood of the rising generation, had taken a stand against the inoculation of the military spirit in the youth of the nation that had a tendency to rob the country of the power and force it would some time in the future need for self-preservation.†General Bliss further declared that “ the stand taken to remove the military spirit looking to univeral peace is wrong.†The reason this army ofï¬cer depre- ciates peace and stands for war is ap parent at a glance. Peace would mean the loss of his profession. So long as there is a prospect of war he can strut about, look solemn and be saluted by his underlings,’ and this is very dear to the heart of one educated in the polite art of murder. What the gene- ral and others of his type fear is that working men may come to their senses sufï¬ciently to refuse to serve as murâ€" r dercrs. The Whole military business is for the beneï¬t of the ruling class, and every intelligent worker ought to set his face like flint against it. There is no patriotism in patricide or fratri- cide. There is no glory in bloodshed; there is no honor in killing or maim- ing our fellowmen. If the pot-bellied gentry of Wall street, whose interests General Bliss represents and whose spirit he voices, want'to rush out on a/ killing expedition and have their ex- cessive avoirdupois perforated with bullets for the glory there'is in it, let them do so to their hearts’- content. ~-But working men have had enough of killing working men for the beneï¬t of their fat and festive masters. General Bliss wants war for what there is in it for himself and for the master class whose tool he is. Very well I' Let him and his class go to war and extermiâ€" nate .eabh other; but as for us we stand for peace, and we willurge the worst peace conceivable against the best war that can be imagined. To quote out friend Roosevelt : “Murder is murder†even if the murderer does shoot his victim in the back on a ï¬eld of battle. ' Socialists the world over, men, women and children, stand like a wall of granit against war and for univer- sal peaceâ€"Appeal to Reason. Pensioning Presidents. Carnegie has a penchant for penâ€" sioning superannuated servants of the plutes. His latest scheme is to pen- sion erg-presidents This would appear f Fenelon Falls Branch on the surface to be an insult to the American people, no less than to the ex-presidents themselves. But it is ' nothing of the kind. Nothing is more: ï¬tting than that Carnegie and his. class should pension err-presidents such as Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson, et 3.1. They are faithful and devoted servants of‘ the capitalist class. They only receive seventy-ï¬ve thousand dollars a year and twenty-ï¬ve thousaan more per all-' num for expense, and why should they not be pensioned by their masters af- ter they retire, so as to keep them out‘ of the county house? They can hardly be expected to save anything out of such pauper wages. They only get as much in a day as a good many work- . ing women get in a year, and it re- quires all this to keep the wolf from the automobile. Woodrow Wilson was wise to the propriety of plutocratic pensioning of professors long before he was elected president. He did not wait to be in. vited by Carnegie to a place on the pension roll, but' put himself in the- pension line at Carnegie’s ofï¬ce and. personally handed in his applicatiorr' to be put on the private pension roll of broken down stiffs who were them- selves out lackeying for the ruling class. Carnegie .has various schemes for pensioning and subsidizing the lame ducks of capitalism; but it never occurs to him that worn out workers whose exploited bones are no longer wanted in the slave-pens are ï¬t snb~ jects for consideration when pensionâ€" ing is in order, especially when the giver of the pension poses as a great philanthropist. . But better still, this pensioning will be wholly unnecessary when the work- ers are no longer robbed. Socialism will put an end to the robbery and give every man and every woman a full and fair chance to earn an honest- living under decent conditions, so that they may be self-respecting men and women instead of the fawning lickv spittles of parasites who rob honest producers, and out of the proceeds pension another set of parasites to- keep the workers in ignorance and’ subjection. In the meantime think of the mon- umental gall of Carnegie on the one hand and the abject servility of the: exâ€"presidents on the other hand, and you will have an interesting side-light on capitalismâ€"Ibid. ' -0 Indignation against injustice pro- duces no results unless it is intelli~ gently directed. To reject an idea because it is new is not a proof of shrewd sense; it is a. proof of bigoted ignorance. If I knew of any remedy that would relieve the suffering of the toil- ing many I would surely tell it; but I know of none short of revolution. T 7".» .. 1836 a i 1981.3 ‘3 i, am? tag i 77 Years in Business. Capital and Surplus Over $7,600,000. TWo'Members of a Family particularly if they live far from town, frequently ï¬nd it very convenient to take advantage of our ? Joint Account plan. ' 1 Either may make deposits or withdraw cash on his; or her own signature alone. the banking when in town, Thus either can do as suits their convenience. $1.00 opens 3. Savings Account, Joint or ordinary. Interest added half-yearly. drawn at any time. Fenelon‘ Falls Branch Money may be with- M.W. Reive, Manager.